FREEDOM HERO: JOHN PAUL JONESby Jack from San Diego

One of the world’s most famous mariners was John Paul Jones. Though born in Kirkcudbrightshire, Scotland, in 1747, he is considered the “Father of the American Navy.” He was a significant figure in the creation of the United States and its powerful navy, and was friends with such noteworthy patriots like: Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin and Marquis de Lafayette, the Frenchman who helped fight the American Revolution.
Alison Davis Tibbits’ book John Paul Jones gives an in depth account of the life and career of John Paul Jones. He was born on July 6, 1747. He was part of a well-to-do, seven-sibling family, but two of the offspring died in infancy. They lived close enough to the ocean to see ships pass by. From an early age he developed an interest in sailing. His fondness for the sea and adventure led him to join the British Merchant Marines, since his family did not have connections to enable him to begin a career with Great Britain’s Royal Navy. His work included importing and exporting goods all over the world.
He got his job when he was only thirteen years old working as an apprentice for a merchant and ship owner, John Younger from Whitehaven, England, with whom he had a seven year agreement. At first he did menial tasks as a ship’s boy for Captain Robert Benson on the Friendship, earning a small wage. Here he had a place to live while he learned expert seamanship; he could read, write and navigate using the stars. Early on, the Friendship traveled to Virginia; John Paul loved America from his very visit.
After serving three years of his apprenticeship, John Paul was released due to Captain Benson’s financial problems. Following this he worked on two different slave ships, first as a 3rd mate and later as a chief mate. He despised the cruelty and horrible conditions of the slave trade and resigned when the ship was in Jamaica where he boarded his friend’s ship to return home. On his way back to Scotland, both the captain and his first mate died of malaria. With no one onboard with navigating experience, the ship ended up traveling aimlessly. The result was that John Paul navigated the ship safely to Kirkcudbright and at only 21 years old was named captain.
As captain of John, John Paul worked long, exhausting hours. He would buy and sell cargoes of rum, wood, tobacco, spices and other goods in ports along his route. With an unknown seven-man crew, first-impressions were important. He dressed like a gentleman, was well groomed, and tried to set a good example for his crew.
In May 1770, John sailed for its next cruise in Tobago, one of Caribbean’s Windward Islands. About half way to Tobago, the ship’s carpenter, Mungo Maxwell, tried to lead the crew to mutiny. John Paul ended the illegal rebellion and ordered Maxwell to be flogged.
When John landed in Tobago, Maxwell went to the Vice-Admiralty Court, the office that ruled on crimes committed at sea. Maxwell filed a complaint towards John Paul, showing scars to court officials for his maltreatment. When Maxwell’s scars were said “not extreme” by court officials, Maxwell left for home on Barcelona Packet, but died during the voyage due to typhoid fever.
When John returned to Kirkcudbrightshire, a sheriff charged John Paul with Maxwell’s murder and imprisoned him in jail. Because John Paul and almost everyone in Kirkcudbrightshire believed he was innocent, John Paul convinced the court that he would stand trial after he gathered enough evidence to prove his innocence. The courts allowed to be released on bail and gave time to collect the information.
On his way to Tobago in the spring of 1771, John was sold to a different owner and in the process John Paul lost his job. When John Paul reached Tobago, he contacted the captain of Barcelona Packet, the ship Maxwell died on. Both John Paul and the captain confirmed that Maxwell was in good in health when he sailed for London, noting that he became ill and died from fever. When these documents were sent to Maxwell’s mother, she gave them to the court, which accepted them and cleared John Paul’s record.
Putting the false murder charges behind him, John Paul agreed to command a British merchant ship named Betsy during its voyages towards many lands to sell various cargoes. In 1773, Betsy was going through a financial crisis. John Paul promised to pay back the crewmembers in free items in cargoes below deck when he earned extra money. The crew resented the idea. One was outraged. He desperately tried to lead its crew to mutiny by urging the others to demand their wages immediately. John Paul rushed to his cabin and grabbed a sword to end the matter. The troublemaker began swinging a club over John Paul’s head. John Paul thrust forward to defend himself as the man lunged at him, running right into the sword, killing him instantly. John Paul knew word would have out quickly if he didn’t escape right then. So he borrowed a horse, crossed the island and left for Barbados. In doing so, he left behind everything he worked so hard to build-his career, bank account, properties, friends, and business ventures.
From 1773 to 1774, John Paul started a mysterious life in America with the alias of first as “John Jones” and then “John Paul Jones”. He lived very quietly and never discussed his past with anyone.
In 1775, America’s Congress formed the Continental Navy. Jones hoped to join the new navy and was appointed 1st lieutenant of Alfred, one of the first new frigates the Naval Committee had issued. Jones was perfect for his newly appointed job. Most new recruits had no naval experience at all. Jones had a thorough knowledge of seamanship, having learned from the best men of the British Merchant Marine. Jones knew all routes between England and the West Indies, and best of all, he wasn’t afraid of the British. Jones remained on the Alfred until a promotion to captain of Providence in late 1775. Later, Jones began an independent voyage to seize, take, sink, burn, or destroy British ships. Jones was so successful in these operations that he continued to do them on the different ships he later commanded.

Jones would later take command of various ships including his famous fight with H.M.S. Serapis aboard Bonhomme Richard in 1779. During this fight, Bonhomme Richard was outnumbered, outgunned, heavily damaged and was about to sink any moment. The British asked if Jones would surrender. In response, Jones cried out his famous quote, “I have not yet begun to fight!” In the end, it was the British who surrendered. In that one fight alone, John Paul Jones had proven his bravery and patriotism. He was also very kind to not only his crewmembers, but also his prisoners. He even invited the captain of H.M.S. Serapis to a glass of wine after the fight to show his gratitude for a worthy opponent.
Jones never knew that George Washington granted him American citizenship. After the Revolutionary War, John Paul Jones became ill with pneumonia. He was alone in Paris, France, except for his servant, doctor, and a few friends. On July 18, 1792, John Paul Jones contacted American Ambassador Robert Morris that he was sure he was dying. Jones didn’t want to be with anyone else except for Robert Morris at this time.
Morris, before leaving for a dinner engagement, promised to return at eight o’clock. During his absence, John Paul Jones walked to his bedchamber, lay facedown on the bed, and died. His forty-fifth birthday had passed, unnoticed, twelve days earlier.
John Paul Jones’ legacy still lives on. In 1905, Jones’ coffin was found and identified. His coffin was escorted to America by eleven United Stated Naval ships and arrived in Annapolis, Maryland on April 24, 1906. It was January 26, 1913 when John Paul Jones’ body was moved to a specially designed crypt beneath the Naval Academy’s Bancroft Hall and is currently
there today.
John Paul Jones set up the foundation for America’s Navy. Without him, the war could’ve played out differently. Without him, the United States may have not had a navy. Without him, America may have not been here today. America is forever in Jones’ debt, for he have not only created the powerful United States Navy we have today, he also help create the United States itself.




WOMAN HERO: HELEN KELLERby Dominique from San Diego
Helen Keller was the first child of Arthur H. Keller and Kate Adams. Helen lost her sight and her hearing because of acute congestion of stomach and brain, at nineteen months. When she learned enough to be able to interact with her little sister, she had written, “My little sister will understand me now…I am not dumb now.” She was willing to learn how to spell, read and write Braille, Math, English, and how to read German and French. She may be deaf and may not be able to see as well as others, but her heart has a desire, a desire to learn. No matter how hard it was, she went for what she wanted.
Helen was born on June 27th, 1880 in Tuscumbia, northern Alabama and died on June 1st 1968, in Connecticut. She lived in a small house with one large room and one small room, where the servant slept.
When Helen was only nineteen months old, the doctor described her illness as acute congestion of stomach and brain, which lead to her loss of hearing and part of sight. When she got a bit older, she didn’t notice the change because she was so young when it happened. One day, her mother invited friends over and Helen noticed that when her mother’s friends communicated, they used their mouths instead of their hands. Once she realized that, she noticed she WAS different. It made her very upset and she started kicking and screaming. At about age four, she was able to find her way around her house, holding her mother’s apron and touching everything as they walked. When she was five, she learned how to put away clean laundry and separate her clothes from her mother’s clothes. At age six, she made friends with a colored girl, Martha Washington, who was eight and who was the daughter of the Kellers’ cook. At about age five, her and her family moved to a bigger house in Baltimore. The family added two half-brothers and soon, a little sister, Mildred.
They moved to Baltimore because Helen’s parents wanted her to have an education. Once they got to Baltimore, they met a doctor, Dr. Chisholm. He told her parents she will get an education but no one in Baltimore can teach both, the deaf and blind. However, the Doctor told her father to consult Dr. Alexander Graham Bell, in Washington, who would be able to give them information about teachers in that area. Dr. Bell told Mr. and Mrs. Keller about a teacher, Ms. Anne Mansfield Sullivan.
On March 3rd, 1887, a year later, Helen finally met her teacher, Ms. Sullivan. Ms. Sullivan taught Helen how to spell words and taught her what they meant. Ms. Sullivan would trace the words into Helen’s hand and say what she spelled. Then she’d ask Helen to trace the words back into her hand. In just a few weeks, Helen knew so much, she could walk by anything in her house and know what it is and how to spell it.
Helen started reading the few books she had at age seven and started reading poetry, like Shakespeare, at age eight. Long after that, Helen found an interest in the Bible. She’d beg her cousin to read her stories out of the Bible everyday. On her thirteenth birthday, she fell in love with History.
In her college reading, she became very familiar with French and German literature. Helen went to college at Radcliffe at age sixteen. It was hard for her to start college because the summer before that was her first personal experience with death, the death of her father.
Helen Keller is a hero because she has accomplished many things while being deaf and blind that most people can’t achieve without those handicaps. Throughout her life, she achieved the impossible.